Among the two dozen candidates now running for the 2020 Democratic
presidential nomination, California senator Kamala Harris has regularly
polled among the top five contenders for the party’s nomination since
announcing her candidacy last January.
Then
California Attorney General Kamala Harris posing for a photo with US
Border Patrol agents at the US-Mexico border fence in 2011 [Credit:
Office of the Attorney General of California]
Both the corporate media and the Democratic Party establishment
hailed her performance in the June 26-27 debate in Miami, when she
attacked former Vice President Joe Biden over his comments about busing
and working with segregationist Democrats in the Senate. She has moved
up in both the polls and fundraising since then, hitting first place in a
poll of California voters this week for the first time.
With two of her four main rivals being white men in their mid-70s,
the 54-year-old Harris, given her gender and mixed Jamaican and south
Indian ancestry, is a likely selection for vice president even if she
fails to win the nomination, considering the Democratic Party’s embrace
of the politics of gender and racial identity.
Harris, like the rest of the Democratic field, is trying to posture
as a progressive alternative to Trump, while, in her case, seeking to
split the difference between Biden, the “moderate” frontrunner, and his
two main challengers from the “left” wing of the party, Bernie Sanders
and Elizabeth Warren. Harris has tried to have it both ways, combining
the “electability” argument of Biden with the suggestion that, as a
former prosecutor, she would aggressively challenge Trump.
At the heart of Harris’s candidacy—as far as her credentials with the
ruling class are concerned—is her record as a ruthless operative in the
fields of criminal justice and national security. She was district
attorney in San Francisco for six years, then California state
attorney-general for the same length of time, before winning a Senate
seat in 2016.
Senate Democratic leaders promoted Harris from the start, giving her
plum committee assignments, including Budget, Homeland Security and
Judiciary, where she was heavily publicized for her role in the
questioning of Supreme Court nominee, now justice, Brett Kavanaugh.
Most revealing was her appointment to the Intelligence Committee in
2017—the only newly elected Democrat to be given such a critical
position, and an indication that, as far as the Democratic Party
establishment and the military-intelligence apparatus were concerned,
Harris is a “safe pair of hands.”
Harris has repaid this confidence by acting as the point woman, among
the Democratic presidential candidates, for the bogus anti-Russian
campaign, demanding Trump’s impeachment, not for his flagrant violations
of the US Constitution or his persecution of immigrants, but based on
the McCarthyite smear that he is a stooge of Moscow.
Speaking at the California Democratic Party’s convention in early
June, Harris said, “Let’s talk about this so-called commander in chief.
He parrots Russia’s lies over the word of American intelligence and law
enforcement leaders. He denies that Russia interfered in the election of
the president of the United States. We need to begin impeachment
proceedings and we need a new commander in chief.”
She continued along these lines in the June 27 Democratic debate,
when she repeatedly attacked
Trump on foreign policy, declaring, on
North Korea, that Trump “embraces Kim Jong-un, a dictator, for the sake
of a photo op,” adding that “he takes the word of the Russian president
over the word of the American intelligence community when it comes to a
threat to our democracy and our elections.” In a
post-debate interview
on MSNBC, Harris attacked Trump for taking “the word of a Saudi prince
over the word of the American intelligence community” on the murder of
Jamal Khashoggi.
For Harris, as for the Democratic Party as a whole, there is no
greater breach of political norms than failing to take “the word of the
American intelligence community.”
A career prosecutor
Harris began her political career in 1990 as a deputy district
attorney for Alameda County, which includes the city of Oakland, before
crossing the bay to a similar position in San Francisco in 1998. She
quickly made high-level connections, moving in elite social circles,
where she cultivated patrons like oil heiress Vanessa Getty. She briefly
dated then California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, who became mayor
of San Francisco and promoted her political career and financial
interests.
Kamala Harris with Obama administration Attorney General Eric Holder [Credit: Lonnie Tague for the Department of Justice]
By the time Harris decided to challenge incumbent San Francisco
District Attorney Terence Hallinan in 2004, she was able to outraise him
by two-to-one and spent so much money on the campaign that the San
Francisco Ethics Commission imposed a record fine for violating the
city’s campaign finance law. Hallinan, a former defense lawyer with
close ties to Bay Area radical circles—his father had been the 1952
presidential candidate of the Progressive Party—was opposed by the
business establishment, the police unions, and the
San Francisco Chronicle, whose editorial on the contest was headlined: “Harris, for law and order.”
Six years later, Harris was the consensus Democratic Party choice for
the position of state attorney general being vacated by Jerry Brown,
who was the Democratic candidate for governor. She ran with backing of
her local congresswoman, Nancy Pelosi, and both Democratic senators,
Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.
As both a city prosecutor and as the top law enforcement official in
the largest US state, Harris made a name for herself as a strict “law
and order” advocate. As San Francisco District Attorney, she prided
herself on the high conviction rates obtained oftentimes heedless of
ethical legal practice. Felony conviction rates rose from 52 percent in
2003 to 67 percent in 2006 under her leadership.
This increase in convictions, however, was often due to clear
misconduct on the part of Harris and her office. In 2012, Superior Court
Judge Ann-Christine Massulo ruled that Harris’s office violated
defendants’ rights by withholding damaging information about a corrupt
police crime lab technician who had stolen drugs and falsified reports.
As state attorney-general, Harris took on the high-profile defense of
the state prison system against court rulings condemning overcrowding
and mistreatment of prisoners as unconstitutional “cruel and unusual
punishment.” She sought to end federal court supervision of the prisons,
later defending her aggressive advocacy with the cynical statement that
as the principal legal representative of the state government, “I have a
client, and I don’t get to choose my client.”
In 2015, Harris attempted to overturn a lower court ruling declaring
the state’s death penalty laws cruel and inhumane. Once again Harris
claimed that she was simply defending her client, the state of
California which didn’t necessarily reflect her own views on the
subject.
When the US Supreme Court in
Brown v. Plata in 2014 declared
the state’s prisons so overcrowded that they constituted cruel and
unusual punishment, Harris fought the ruling. Prisoners were stacked in
three-person bunkbeds and were falling ill and dying for lack of medical
care. The state of California was subsequently ordered to reduce its
prison population by 40,000 inmates. Harris actually argued that if
California released inmates too soon, the state would lose an important
source of labor, citing its reliance on untrained prison inmates risking
their lives fighting wildfires for $2 a day.
In 2015, Harris defended convictions obtained by county prosecutors
after the latter had inserted false confessions into interrogation
transcripts. Harris asserted at the time that perjury was not sufficient
to demonstrate prosecutorial misconduct.
The vindictive, anti-democratic character of Harris’s tenure as
attorney general was not limited to the courtroom either. In 2010,
Harris sponsored a law, later signed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger,
which sought to improve schools by jailing parents of truant children
and subjecting them to fines of up to $2,000. Even though the law
explicitly made jail time a probable outcome for parents of truant
children, Harris claimed in a CNN interview last May that sending
parents to jail was an “unintended consequence” of the law.
Harris used her powers as a prosecutor to conduct vicious attacks on
the poor and working class while doing her utmost to shield police and
politicians from punishment. This stands in marked contrast to what her
campaign claims was her record of virtually untarnished progressivism
while in office. In her book,
The Truths We Hold, issued to
help launch her campaign, Harris mixes typical sentimental boilerplate
with overt falsifications of her political record. She describes herself
as a “progressive prosecutor.” Moreover, she claims she “used the
powers of the office with a sense of fairness, perspective and
experience.”
Many
who’ve followed her career as prosecutor have had a different
perspective, however. Lara Bazelon, former director of the Loyola Law
School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote in a
New York Times
op-ed, “Time after time, when progressives urged her to embrace
criminal justice reforms as a district attorney and then the state’s
attorney general, Ms. Harris opposed them or stayed silent.” Donald
Specter, executive director of the Prison Law Office, stated in a
Daily Beast
interview, “As far as I know, she did very little if anything to
improve the criminal justice system when she was attorney general.”
Adopting the persona of a “progressive”
Harris launched her presidential campaign with the slogan “Kamala
Harris for the people,” a reference to the statement of identification
made by district attorneys and other prosecutors when they appear in
court. In fits and starts, she adopted positions on a variety of
economic and social issues which can be portrayed as vaguely
“progressive,” although on closer examination they usually amount to
nothing. On the few occasions where she has, perhaps inadvertently,
voiced a “left” sentiment, she invariably qualifies it or takes it back
the next day.
Thus she embraced the call of Bernie Sanders for “Medicare for all,”
but has twice reversed herself on the question of ending private health
insurance in favor of a federally financed system, an indication that
she really has no intention of implementing such a plan.
Kamala Harris [Credit: Office of the Attorney General of California]
Harris also sponsored, along with fellow presidential candidate
Elizabeth Warren, a Senate bill known as the Climate Risk Disclosure Act
which would use “market forces to speed up the transition from fossil
fuels to cleaner energy.” The bill was based on the claims of former
Vice President Al Gore and other Democratic Party leaders that
environmental clean-up and “green energy” can be promoted as
profit-making enterprises.
This bankrupt proposal issues no penalties for polluting companies.
It requires them to do nothing to curb pollution aside from listing the
amount of greenhouse gases they emit, what fossil fuels they use and how
their asset valuations will be affected if they were to reduce carbon
emissions in line with the Paris climate accords.
On immigration, Harris has also promised to protect DACA recipients
from deportation and publicly opposed Trump’s border wall with Mexico.
She tacitly supported the recent Senate passage of $4.6 billion for
Trump’s network of concentration camps for immigrants along the
US-Mexico border. Like the other Senate Democrats running for president,
she was absent for the vote. The bill was approved by a bipartisan 84-8
margin.
Other legislative proposals were crafted with an eye to their
political popularity among Democratic primary voters, to give Harris a
more liberal image than her actual record in California or Washington.
She supported federal legalization of recreational marijuana and
increases in public defender pay to the levels of their state prosecutor
counterparts. After the wave of teacher strikes, Harris called for a
$13,500-a-year pay increase for every schoolteacher in the US.
She has also called for increasing the federal minimum wage to $15
per hour, which, in addition to leaving minimum wage workers still
severely impoverished, would make many of these workers ineligible for
public assistance programs such as food stamps, housing subsidies and
Medicaid.
In part, Harris’s comparative lack of skill at populist posturing is
rooted in her own life circumstances. She earned six-figure incomes for
decades and is now a millionaire many times over. According to her tax
returns, released in April, she and her husband, wealthy lawyer Douglas
Emhoff, had an adjusted gross income of $1,884,319 in 2018, putting them
comfortably in the top 0.1 percent. The bulk of this came from Emhoff’s
entertainment law practice, while Harris made $157,352 in Senate salary
and $320,125 in net profits from her campaign memoir.
While Harris has been half-hearted and inconsistent in her attempts
at social demagogy—not the natural bent of someone who spent most of her
career putting people in jail or defending police atrocities against
the working class—she has shown somewhat more energy in embracing
identity politics, which she has previously invoked as the “first black
and female” DA of San Francisco, the “first black and female” attorney
general of California, and currently as the only black and female US
senator.
Harris jumped on the #MeToo bandwagon, being among the first to call
for the resignation of Minnesota Senator Al Franken over accusations of
sexual misconduct. These demands were made in spite of the fact that
none of the allegations had been proven and even if they had, none would
have risen even to the level of a misdemeanor criminal charge.
Harris introduced a bill known as the Maternal CARE ACT to address
racial disparities in the care of expectant black mothers which have led
to pregnancy-related deaths happening at a rate of 3.3 times more than
white mothers. The bill was introduced after a May 10 report released by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The CDC report largely recommends a more scientific approach to the
issue, including greater access to prenatal programs and other services
for expectant mothers, temporary housing programs, better adoption of
sepsis, hemorrhage, and transfusion protocols among medical personnel,
etc. Harris’s Maternal CARE Act, on the other hand, roots the problem in
race and particularly in what she alleges to be the conscious and
widespread bias of health care practitioners. The bill would earmark
$150 million to identify high risk pregnancies in order to “provide new
mothers with the culturally competent care and resources they need.”
At this point in the campaign, it can be said that Harris, more so
than any other candidate, has taken up the reactionary mantle of
identity politics. In that sense, she has taken her cue from the 2016
campaign of Hillary Clinton. The senator’s younger sister, Maya Harris,
was a senior policy adviser to Clinton’s 2016 campaign and currently
works as chairwoman for the Harris 2020 campaign.
The younger Harris also works as a political analyst for MSNBC and is
married to Tony West, general counsel for Uber and former United States
Associate Attorney General in the Obama administration. Maya Harris
also edited drafts of Stanford University law professor Michelle
Alexander’s 2010 book,
The New Jim Crow. The work, which spent a significant amount of time on the
New York Times
bestseller list, argued that a new racial caste system existed in the
United States, largely enforced by the actions of poor whites, which far
outweighed any and all considerations of class as a significant social
division.
There can be no doubt that if Harris were to succeed in her
presidential run, the bourgeois media would subject the public to a
constant propaganda barrage, celebrating the transformative character of
the first female president and the first black female president at
that. Harris, who is of Jamaican and Indian descent, is only the third
woman of African descent to run for the office.
This would in no way change the fact that a Harris administration would be as reactionary as Trump and Obama before her.
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